Amendment 1 would prevent the Medicaid Trust Fund for the Elderly from
being “swept,” or the process used when excess money builds up in a dedicated fund
that then may be used for other obligations, through a special appropriations
bill. It would join a small number of the largest funds that, given the nature
of their purposes, have independent and very predictable funding streams and
uses to which they are put (except for the Bond Security and Redemption Fund, a
pass-through vehicle for revenues that assures state debt gets paid).
This would create an outlier, for the Fund has a narrow purpose: mainly
to provide a cushion to support Medicaid payments to nursing homes and for the
remainder to home- and community-based services, among other things, this mix determined
by department policy although the law gives nursing homes the first crack at
funds from earnings. By statute,
only the interest could be swept, which, given it started with a $500 million principal
balance a dozen years ago, is now cushioned by less than $20 million. It has only a relatively
tiny revenue stream, from the sale of specialty license plates and penalty
payments by nursing homes.
Because costs continue upwards in health care (with the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act promising even more), almost all interest
ever earned has had to go to wage supports or got eaten in investment losses,
leaving little to be swept for the foreseeable future, even as the fund never
has been targeted for this. Still, proponents of the measure argue it should receive
this special level of protection.
But this would cordon off a fund that, unlike the others already
granted this privilege, is very narrowly tailored with the prospect of great
change to come to the health care industry. In particular, future policy should
deemphasize nursing home usage and increase flexibility of uses of long-term
health care dollars. This trend will affect the state more than most, because of
past decisions (such as the fund’s establishment, through federal money) that
have significantly favored nursing homes to the point they enjoy generous
provisions that inefficiently use taxpayer dollars.
In this environment, it does the state no good to reduce deliberately
the flexibility it needs to respond, which passage of this amendment could do.
For example, what if the state decided it needed more funds to come into its Community Choices Waiver,
which allows senior citizens to live independently (and at less cost to the
taxpayer) but was blocked by the amendment from withdrawing the money out of
the Fund? This would force money into nursing home expenditures and drag along with
them some elderly who could have lived independently into nursing homes,
perverting the ideal money-follows-the-person idea into
person-follows-the-money.
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